1
2This is some preliminary documentation for OpenSSL.
3
4Contents:
5
6 OpenSSL X509V3 extension configuration
7 X509V3 Extension code: programmers guide
8 PKCS#12 Library
9
10
11==============================================================================
12               OpenSSL X509V3 extension configuration
13==============================================================================
14
15OpenSSL X509V3 extension configuration: preliminary documentation.
16
17INTRODUCTION.
18
19For OpenSSL 0.9.2 the extension code has be considerably enhanced. It is now
20possible to add and print out common X509 V3 certificate and CRL extensions.
21
22BEGINNERS NOTE
23
24For most simple applications you don't need to know too much about extensions:
25the default openssl.cnf values will usually do sensible things.
26
27If you want to know more you can initially quickly look through the sections
28describing how the standard OpenSSL utilities display and add extensions and
29then the list of supported extensions.
30
31For more technical information about the meaning of extensions see:
32
33http://www.imc.org/ietf-pkix/
34http://home.netscape.com/eng/security/certs.html
35
36PRINTING EXTENSIONS.
37
38Extension values are automatically printed out for supported extensions.
39
40openssl x509 -in cert.pem -text
41openssl crl -in crl.pem -text
42
43will give information in the extension printout, for example:
44
45        X509v3 extensions:
46            X509v3 Basic Constraints: 
47                CA:TRUE
48            X509v3 Subject Key Identifier: 
49                73:FE:F7:59:A7:E1:26:84:44:D6:44:36:EE:79:1A:95:7C:B1:4B:15
50            X509v3 Authority Key Identifier: 
51                keyid:73:FE:F7:59:A7:E1:26:84:44:D6:44:36:EE:79:1A:95:7C:B1:4B:15, DirName:/C=AU/ST=Some-State/O=Internet Widgits Pty Ltd/Email=email@1.address/Email=email@2.address, serial:00
52            X509v3 Key Usage: 
53                Certificate Sign, CRL Sign
54            X509v3 Subject Alternative Name: 
55                email:email@1.address, email:email@2.address
56
57CONFIGURATION FILES.
58
59The OpenSSL utilities 'ca' and 'req' can now have extension sections listing
60which certificate extensions to include. In each case a line:
61
62x509_extensions = extension_section
63
64indicates which section contains the extensions. In the case of 'req' the
65extension section is used when the -x509 option is present to create a
66self signed root certificate.
67
68The 'x509' utility also supports extensions when it signs a certificate.
69The -extfile option is used to set the configuration file containing the
70extensions. In this case a line with:
71
72extensions = extension_section
73
74in the nameless (default) section is used. If no such line is included then
75it uses the default section.
76
77You can also add extensions to CRLs: a line
78
79crl_extensions = crl_extension_section
80
81will include extensions when the -gencrl option is used with the 'ca' utility.
82You can add any extension to a CRL but of the supported extensions only
83issuerAltName and authorityKeyIdentifier make any real sense. Note: these are
84CRL extensions NOT CRL *entry* extensions which cannot currently be generated.
85CRL entry extensions can be displayed.
86
87NB. At this time Netscape Communicator rejects V2 CRLs: to get an old V1 CRL
88you should not include a crl_extensions line in the configuration file.
89
90As with all configuration files you can use the inbuilt environment expansion
91to allow the values to be passed in the environment. Therefore if you have
92several extension sections used for different purposes you can have a line:
93
94x509_extensions = $ENV::ENV_EXT
95
96and set the ENV_EXT environment variable before calling the relevant utility.
97
98EXTENSION SYNTAX.
99
100Extensions have the basic form:
101
102extension_name=[critical,] extension_options
103
104the use of the critical option makes the extension critical. Extreme caution
105should be made when using the critical flag. If an extension is marked
106as critical then any client that does not understand the extension should
107reject it as invalid. Some broken software will reject certificates which
108have *any* critical extensions (these violates PKIX but we have to live
109with it).
110
111There are three main types of extension: string extensions, multi-valued
112extensions, and raw extensions.
113
114String extensions simply have a string which contains either the value itself
115or how it is obtained.
116
117For example:
118
119nsComment="This is a Comment"
120
121Multi-valued extensions have a short form and a long form. The short form
122is a list of names and values:
123
124basicConstraints=critical,CA:true,pathlen:1
125
126The long form allows the values to be placed in a separate section:
127
128basicConstraints=critical,@bs_section
129
130[bs_section]
131
132CA=true
133pathlen=1
134
135Both forms are equivalent. However it should be noted that in some cases the
136same name can appear multiple times, for example,
137
138subjectAltName=email:steve@here,email:steve@there
139
140in this case an equivalent long form is:
141
142subjectAltName=@alt_section
143
144[alt_section]
145
146email.1=steve@here
147email.2=steve@there
148
149This is because the configuration file code cannot handle the same name
150occurring twice in the same section.
151
152The syntax of raw extensions is governed by the extension code: it can
153for example contain data in multiple sections. The correct syntax to
154use is defined by the extension code itself: check out the certificate
155policies extension for an example.
156
157There are two ways to encode arbitrary extensions.
158
159The first way is to use the word ASN1 followed by the extension content
160using the same syntax as ASN1_generate_nconf(). For example:
161
1621.2.3.4=critical,ASN1:UTF8String:Some random data
163
1641.2.3.4=ASN1:SEQUENCE:seq_sect
165
166[seq_sect]
167
168field1 = UTF8:field1
169field2 = UTF8:field2
170
171It is also possible to use the word DER to include arbitrary data in any
172extension.
173
1741.2.3.4=critical,DER:01:02:03:04
1751.2.3.4=DER:01020304
176
177The value following DER is a hex dump of the DER encoding of the extension
178Any extension can be placed in this form to override the default behaviour.
179For example:
180
181basicConstraints=critical,DER:00:01:02:03
182
183WARNING: DER should be used with caution. It is possible to create totally
184invalid extensions unless care is taken.
185
186CURRENTLY SUPPORTED EXTENSIONS.
187
188If you aren't sure about extensions then they can be largely ignored: its only
189when you want to do things like restrict certificate usage when you need to
190worry about them. 
191
192The only extension that a beginner might want to look at is Basic Constraints.
193If in addition you want to try Netscape object signing the you should also
194look at Netscape Certificate Type.
195
196Literal String extensions.
197
198In each case the 'value' of the extension is placed directly in the
199extension. Currently supported extensions in this category are: nsBaseUrl,
200nsRevocationUrl, nsCaRevocationUrl, nsRenewalUrl, nsCaPolicyUrl,
201nsSslServerName and nsComment.
202
203For example:
204
205nsComment="This is a test comment"
206
207Bit Strings.
208
209Bit string extensions just consist of a list of supported bits, currently
210two extensions are in this category: PKIX keyUsage and the Netscape specific
211nsCertType.
212
213nsCertType (netscape certificate type) takes the flags: client, server, email,
214objsign, reserved, sslCA, emailCA, objCA.
215
216keyUsage (PKIX key usage) takes the flags: digitalSignature, nonRepudiation,
217keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment, keyAgreement, keyCertSign, cRLSign,
218encipherOnly, decipherOnly.
219
220For example:
221
222nsCertType=server
223
224keyUsage=digitalSignature, nonRepudiation
225
226Hints on Netscape Certificate Type.
227
228Other than Basic Constraints this is the only extension a beginner might
229want to use, if you want to try Netscape object signing, otherwise it can
230be ignored.
231
232If you want a certificate that can be used just for object signing then:
233
234nsCertType=objsign
235
236will do the job. If you want to use it as a normal end user and server
237certificate as well then
238
239nsCertType=objsign,email,server
240
241is more appropriate. You cannot use a self signed certificate for object
242signing (well Netscape signtool can but it cheats!) so you need to create
243a CA certificate and sign an end user certificate with it.
244
245Side note: If you want to conform to the Netscape specifications then you
246should really also set:
247
248nsCertType=objCA
249
250in the *CA* certificate for just an object signing CA and
251
252nsCertType=objCA,emailCA,sslCA
253
254for everything. Current Netscape software doesn't enforce this so it can
255be omitted.
256
257Basic Constraints.
258
259This is generally the only extension you need to worry about for simple
260applications. If you want your certificate to be usable as a CA certificate
261(in addition to an end user certificate) then you set this to:
262
263basicConstraints=CA:TRUE
264
265if you want to be certain the certificate cannot be used as a CA then do:
266
267basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
268
269The rest of this section describes more advanced usage.
270
271Basic constraints is a multi-valued extension that supports a CA and an
272optional pathlen option. The CA option takes the values true and false and
273pathlen takes an integer. Note if the CA option is false the pathlen option
274should be omitted. 
275
276The pathlen parameter indicates the maximum number of CAs that can appear
277below this one in a chain. So if you have a CA with a pathlen of zero it can
278only be used to sign end user certificates and not further CAs. This all
279assumes that the software correctly interprets this extension of course.
280
281Examples:
282
283basicConstraints=CA:TRUE
284basicConstraints=critical,CA:TRUE, pathlen:0
285
286NOTE: for a CA to be considered valid it must have the CA option set to
287TRUE. An end user certificate MUST NOT have the CA value set to true.
288According to PKIX recommendations it should exclude the extension entirely,
289however some software may require CA set to FALSE for end entity certificates.
290
291Extended Key Usage.
292
293This extensions consists of a list of usages.
294
295These can either be object short names of the dotted numerical form of OIDs.
296While any OID can be used only certain values make sense. In particular the
297following PKIX, NS and MS values are meaningful:
298
299Value			Meaning
300-----			-------
301serverAuth		SSL/TLS Web Server Authentication.
302clientAuth		SSL/TLS Web Client Authentication.
303codeSigning		Code signing.
304emailProtection		E-mail Protection (S/MIME).
305timeStamping		Trusted Timestamping
306msCodeInd		Microsoft Individual Code Signing (authenticode)
307msCodeCom		Microsoft Commercial Code Signing (authenticode)
308msCTLSign		Microsoft Trust List Signing
309msSGC			Microsoft Server Gated Crypto
310msEFS			Microsoft Encrypted File System
311nsSGC			Netscape Server Gated Crypto
312
313For example, under IE5 a CA can be used for any purpose: by including a list
314of the above usages the CA can be restricted to only authorised uses.
315
316Note: software packages may place additional interpretations on certificate 
317use, in particular some usages may only work for selected CAs. Don't for example
318expect just including msSGC or nsSGC will automatically mean that a certificate
319can be used for SGC ("step up" encryption) otherwise anyone could use it.
320
321Examples:
322
323extendedKeyUsage=critical,codeSigning,1.2.3.4
324extendedKeyUsage=nsSGC,msSGC
325
326Subject Key Identifier.
327
328This is really a string extension and can take two possible values. Either
329a hex string giving details of the extension value to include or the word
330'hash' which then automatically follow PKIX guidelines in selecting and
331appropriate key identifier. The use of the hex string is strongly discouraged.
332
333Example: subjectKeyIdentifier=hash
334
335Authority Key Identifier.
336
337The authority key identifier extension permits two options. keyid and issuer:
338both can take the optional value "always".
339
340If the keyid option is present an attempt is made to copy the subject key
341identifier from the parent certificate. If the value "always" is present
342then an error is returned if the option fails.
343
344The issuer option copies the issuer and serial number from the issuer
345certificate. Normally this will only be done if the keyid option fails or
346is not included: the "always" flag will always include the value.
347
348Subject Alternative Name.
349
350The subject alternative name extension allows various literal values to be
351included in the configuration file. These include "email" (an email address)
352"URI" a uniform resource indicator, "DNS" (a DNS domain name), RID (a
353registered ID: OBJECT IDENTIFIER), IP (and IP address) and otherName.
354
355Also the email option include a special 'copy' value. This will automatically
356include and email addresses contained in the certificate subject name in
357the extension.
358
359otherName can include arbitrary data associated with an OID: the value
360should be the OID followed by a semicolon and the content in standard
361ASN1_generate_nconf() format.
362
363Examples:
364
365subjectAltName=email:copy,email:my@other.address,URI:http://my.url.here/
366subjectAltName=email:my@other.address,RID:1.2.3.4
367subjectAltName=otherName:1.2.3.4;UTF8:some other identifier
368
369Issuer Alternative Name.
370
371The issuer alternative name option supports all the literal options of
372subject alternative name. It does *not* support the email:copy option because
373that would not make sense. It does support an additional issuer:copy option
374that will copy all the subject alternative name values from the issuer 
375certificate (if possible).
376
377Example:
378
379issuserAltName = issuer:copy
380
381Authority Info Access.
382
383The authority information access extension gives details about how to access
384certain information relating to the CA. Its syntax is accessOID;location
385where 'location' has the same syntax as subject alternative name (except
386that email:copy is not supported). accessOID can be any valid OID but only
387certain values are meaningful for example OCSP and caIssuers. OCSP gives the
388location of an OCSP responder: this is used by Netscape PSM and other software.
389
390Example:
391
392authorityInfoAccess = OCSP;URI:http://ocsp.my.host/
393authorityInfoAccess = caIssuers;URI:http://my.ca/ca.html
394
395CRL distribution points.
396
397This is a multi-valued extension that supports all the literal options of
398subject alternative name. Of the few software packages that currently interpret
399this extension most only interpret the URI option.
400
401Currently each option will set a new DistributionPoint with the fullName
402field set to the given value.
403
404Other fields like cRLissuer and reasons cannot currently be set or displayed:
405at this time no examples were available that used these fields.
406
407If you see this extension with <UNSUPPORTED> when you attempt to print it out
408or it doesn't appear to display correctly then let me know, including the
409certificate (mail me at steve@openssl.org) .
410
411Examples:
412
413crlDistributionPoints=URI:http://www.myhost.com/myca.crl
414crlDistributionPoints=URI:http://www.my.com/my.crl,URI:http://www.oth.com/my.crl
415
416Certificate Policies.
417
418This is a RAW extension. It attempts to display the contents of this extension:
419unfortunately this extension is often improperly encoded.
420
421The certificate policies extension will rarely be used in practice: few
422software packages interpret it correctly or at all. IE5 does partially
423support this extension: but it needs the 'ia5org' option because it will
424only correctly support a broken encoding. Of the options below only the
425policy OID, explicitText and CPS options are displayed with IE5.
426
427All the fields of this extension can be set by using the appropriate syntax.
428
429If you follow the PKIX recommendations of not including any qualifiers and just
430using only one OID then you just include the value of that OID. Multiple OIDs
431can be set separated by commas, for example:
432
433certificatePolicies= 1.2.4.5, 1.1.3.4
434
435If you wish to include qualifiers then the policy OID and qualifiers need to
436be specified in a separate section: this is done by using the @section syntax
437instead of a literal OID value.
438
439The section referred to must include the policy OID using the name
440policyIdentifier, cPSuri qualifiers can be included using the syntax:
441
442CPS.nnn=value
443
444userNotice qualifiers can be set using the syntax:
445
446userNotice.nnn=@notice
447
448The value of the userNotice qualifier is specified in the relevant section.
449This section can include explicitText, organization and noticeNumbers
450options. explicitText and organization are text strings, noticeNumbers is a
451comma separated list of numbers. The organization and noticeNumbers options
452(if included) must BOTH be present. If you use the userNotice option with IE5
453then you need the 'ia5org' option at the top level to modify the encoding:
454otherwise it will not be interpreted properly.
455
456Example:
457
458certificatePolicies=ia5org,1.2.3.4,1.5.6.7.8,@polsect
459
460[polsect]
461
462policyIdentifier = 1.3.5.8
463CPS.1="http://my.host.name/"
464CPS.2="http://my.your.name/"
465userNotice.1=@notice
466
467[notice]
468
469explicitText="Explicit Text Here"
470organization="Organisation Name"
471noticeNumbers=1,2,3,4
472
473TECHNICAL NOTE: the ia5org option changes the type of the 'organization' field,
474according to PKIX it should be of type DisplayText but Verisign uses an 
475IA5STRING and IE5 needs this too.
476
477Display only extensions.
478
479Some extensions are only partially supported and currently are only displayed
480but cannot be set. These include private key usage period, CRL number, and
481CRL reason.
482
483==============================================================================
484		X509V3 Extension code: programmers guide
485==============================================================================
486
487The purpose of the extension code is twofold. It allows an extension to be
488created from a string or structure describing its contents and it prints out an
489extension in a human or machine readable form.
490
4911. Initialisation and cleanup.
492
493No special initialisation is needed before calling the extension functions.
494You used to have to call X509V3_add_standard_extensions(); but this is no longer
495required and this function no longer does anything.
496
497void X509V3_EXT_cleanup(void);
498
499This function should be called to cleanup the extension code if any custom
500extensions have been added. If no custom extensions have been added then this
501call does nothing. After this call all custom extension code is freed up but
502you can still use the standard extensions.
503
5042. Printing and parsing extensions.
505
506The simplest way to print out extensions is via the standard X509 printing
507routines: if you use the standard X509_print() function, the supported
508extensions will be printed out automatically.
509
510The following functions allow finer control over extension display:
511
512int X509V3_EXT_print(BIO *out, X509_EXTENSION *ext, int flag, int indent);
513int X509V3_EXT_print_fp(FILE *out, X509_EXTENSION *ext, int flag, int indent);
514
515These two functions print out an individual extension to a BIO or FILE pointer.
516Currently the flag argument is unused and should be set to 0. The 'indent'
517argument is the number of spaces to indent each line.
518
519void *X509V3_EXT_d2i(X509_EXTENSION *ext);
520
521This function parses an extension and returns its internal structure. The
522precise structure you get back depends on the extension being parsed. If the
523extension if basicConstraints you will get back a pointer to a
524BASIC_CONSTRAINTS structure. Check out the source in crypto/x509v3 for more
525details about the structures returned. The returned structure should be freed
526after use using the relevant free function, BASIC_CONSTRAINTS_free() for 
527example.
528
529void	*	X509_get_ext_d2i(X509 *x, int nid, int *crit, int *idx);
530void	*	X509_CRL_get_ext_d2i(X509_CRL *x, int nid, int *crit, int *idx);
531void	*	X509_REVOKED_get_ext_d2i(X509_REVOKED *x, int nid, int *crit, int *idx);
532void 	*	X509V3_get_d2i(STACK_OF(X509_EXTENSION) *x, int nid, int *crit, int *idx);
533
534These functions combine the operations of searching for extensions and
535parsing them. They search a certificate, a CRL a CRL entry or a stack
536of extensions respectively for extension whose NID is 'nid' and return
537the parsed result of NULL if an error occurred. For example:
538
539BASIC_CONSTRAINTS *bs;
540bs = X509_get_ext_d2i(cert, NID_basic_constraints, NULL, NULL);
541
542This will search for the basicConstraints extension and either return
543it value or NULL. NULL can mean either the extension was not found, it
544occurred more than once or it could not be parsed.
545
546If 'idx' is NULL then an extension is only parsed if it occurs precisely
547once. This is standard behaviour because extensions normally cannot occur
548more than once. If however more than one extension of the same type can
549occur it can be used to parse successive extensions for example:
550
551int i;
552void *ext;
553
554i = -1;
555for(;;) {
556	ext = X509_get_ext_d2i(x, nid, crit, &idx);
557	if(ext == NULL) break;
558	 /* Do something with ext */
559}
560
561If 'crit' is not NULL and the extension was found then the int it points to
562is set to 1 for critical extensions and 0 for non critical. Therefore if the
563function returns NULL but 'crit' is set to 0 or 1 then the extension was
564found but it could not be parsed.
565
566The int pointed to by crit will be set to -1 if the extension was not found
567and -2 if the extension occurred more than once (this will only happen if
568idx is NULL). In both cases the function will return NULL.
569
5703. Generating extensions.
571
572An extension will typically be generated from a configuration file, or some
573other kind of configuration database.
574
575int X509V3_EXT_add_conf(LHASH *conf, X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *section,
576								 X509 *cert);
577int X509V3_EXT_CRL_add_conf(LHASH *conf, X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *section,
578								 X509_CRL *crl);
579
580These functions add all the extensions in the given section to the given
581certificate or CRL. They will normally be called just before the certificate
582or CRL is due to be signed. Both return 0 on error on non zero for success.
583
584In each case 'conf' is the LHASH pointer of the configuration file to use
585and 'section' is the section containing the extension details.
586
587See the 'context functions' section for a description of the ctx parameter.
588
589
590X509_EXTENSION *X509V3_EXT_conf(LHASH *conf, X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *name,
591								 char *value);
592
593This function returns an extension based on a name and value pair, if the
594pair will not need to access other sections in a config file (or there is no
595config file) then the 'conf' parameter can be set to NULL.
596
597X509_EXTENSION *X509V3_EXT_conf_nid(char *conf, X509V3_CTX *ctx, int nid,
598								 char *value);
599
600This function creates an extension in the same way as X509V3_EXT_conf() but
601takes the NID of the extension rather than its name.
602
603For example to produce basicConstraints with the CA flag and a path length of
60410:
605
606x = X509V3_EXT_conf_nid(NULL, NULL, NID_basic_constraints,"CA:TRUE,pathlen:10");
607
608
609X509_EXTENSION *X509V3_EXT_i2d(int ext_nid, int crit, void *ext_struc);
610
611This function sets up an extension from its internal structure. The ext_nid
612parameter is the NID of the extension and 'crit' is the critical flag.
613
6144. Context functions.
615
616The following functions set and manipulate an extension context structure.
617The purpose of the extension context is to allow the extension code to
618access various structures relating to the "environment" of the certificate:
619for example the issuers certificate or the certificate request.
620
621void X509V3_set_ctx(X509V3_CTX *ctx, X509 *issuer, X509 *subject,
622                                 X509_REQ *req, X509_CRL *crl, int flags);
623
624This function sets up an X509V3_CTX structure with details of the certificate
625environment: specifically the issuers certificate, the subject certificate,
626the certificate request and the CRL: if these are not relevant or not
627available then they can be set to NULL. The 'flags' parameter should be set
628to zero.
629
630X509V3_set_ctx_test(ctx)
631
632This macro is used to set the 'ctx' structure to a 'test' value: this is to
633allow the syntax of an extension (or configuration file) to be tested.
634
635X509V3_set_ctx_nodb(ctx)
636
637This macro is used when no configuration database is present.
638
639void X509V3_set_conf_lhash(X509V3_CTX *ctx, LHASH *lhash);
640
641This function is used to set the configuration database when it is an LHASH
642structure: typically a configuration file.
643
644The following functions are used to access a configuration database: they
645should only be used in RAW extensions.
646
647char * X509V3_get_string(X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *name, char *section);
648
649This function returns the value of the parameter "name" in "section", or NULL
650if there has been an error.
651
652void X509V3_string_free(X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *str);
653
654This function frees up the string returned by the above function.
655
656STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) * X509V3_get_section(X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *section);
657
658This function returns a whole section as a STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) .
659
660void X509V3_section_free( X509V3_CTX *ctx, STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *section);
661
662This function frees up the STACK returned by the above function.
663
664Note: it is possible to use the extension code with a custom configuration
665database. To do this the "db_meth" element of the X509V3_CTX structure should
666be set to an X509V3_CTX_METHOD structure. This structure contains the following
667function pointers:
668
669char * (*get_string)(void *db, char *section, char *value);
670STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) * (*get_section)(void *db, char *section);
671void (*free_string)(void *db, char * string);
672void (*free_section)(void *db, STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *section);
673
674these will be called and passed the 'db' element in the X509V3_CTX structure
675to access the database. If a given function is not implemented or not required
676it can be set to NULL.
677
6785. String helper functions.
679
680There are several "i2s" and "s2i" functions that convert structures to and
681from ASCII strings. In all the "i2s" cases the returned string should be
682freed using Free() after use. Since some of these are part of other extension
683code they may take a 'method' parameter. Unless otherwise stated it can be
684safely set to NULL.
685
686char *i2s_ASN1_OCTET_STRING(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *method, ASN1_OCTET_STRING *oct);
687
688This returns a hex string from an ASN1_OCTET_STRING.
689
690char * i2s_ASN1_INTEGER(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *meth, ASN1_INTEGER *aint);
691char * i2s_ASN1_ENUMERATED(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *meth, ASN1_ENUMERATED *aint);
692
693These return a string decimal representations of an ASN1_INTEGER and an
694ASN1_ENUMERATED type, respectively.
695
696ASN1_OCTET_STRING *s2i_ASN1_OCTET_STRING(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *method,
697                                                   X509V3_CTX *ctx, char *str);
698
699This converts an ASCII hex string to an ASN1_OCTET_STRING.
700
701ASN1_INTEGER * s2i_ASN1_INTEGER(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *meth, char *value);
702
703This converts a decimal ASCII string into an ASN1_INTEGER.
704
7056. Multi valued extension helper functions.
706
707The following functions can be used to manipulate STACKs of CONF_VALUE
708structures, as used by multi valued extensions.
709
710int X509V3_get_value_bool(CONF_VALUE *value, int *asn1_bool);
711
712This function expects a boolean value in 'value' and sets 'asn1_bool' to
713it. That is it sets it to 0 for FALSE or 0xff for TRUE. The following
714strings are acceptable: "TRUE", "true", "Y", "y", "YES", "yes", "FALSE"
715"false", "N", "n", "NO" or "no".
716
717int X509V3_get_value_int(CONF_VALUE *value, ASN1_INTEGER **aint);
718
719This accepts a decimal integer of arbitrary length and sets an ASN1_INTEGER.
720
721int X509V3_add_value(const char *name, const char *value,
722						STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) **extlist);
723
724This simply adds a string name and value pair.
725
726int X509V3_add_value_uchar(const char *name, const unsigned char *value,
727                          			STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) **extlist);
728
729The same as above but for an unsigned character value.
730
731int X509V3_add_value_bool(const char *name, int asn1_bool,
732						STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) **extlist);
733
734This adds either "TRUE" or "FALSE" depending on the value of 'asn1_bool'
735
736int X509V3_add_value_bool_nf(char *name, int asn1_bool,
737						STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) **extlist);
738
739This is the same as above except it adds nothing if asn1_bool is FALSE.
740
741int X509V3_add_value_int(const char *name, ASN1_INTEGER *aint,
742						STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) **extlist);
743
744This function adds the value of the ASN1_INTEGER in decimal form.
745
7467. Other helper functions.
747
748<to be added>
749
750ADDING CUSTOM EXTENSIONS.
751
752Currently there are three types of supported extensions. 
753
754String extensions are simple strings where the value is placed directly in the
755extensions, and the string returned is printed out.
756
757Multi value extensions are passed a STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) name and value pairs
758or return a STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE).
759
760Raw extensions are just passed a BIO or a value and it is the extensions
761responsibility to handle all the necessary printing.
762
763There are two ways to add an extension. One is simply as an alias to an already
764existing extension. An alias is an extension that is identical in ASN1 structure
765to an existing extension but has a different OBJECT IDENTIFIER. This can be
766done by calling:
767
768int X509V3_EXT_add_alias(int nid_to, int nid_from);
769
770'nid_to' is the new extension NID and 'nid_from' is the already existing
771extension NID.
772
773Alternatively an extension can be written from scratch. This involves writing
774the ASN1 code to encode and decode the extension and functions to print out and
775generate the extension from strings. The relevant functions are then placed in
776a X509V3_EXT_METHOD structure and int X509V3_EXT_add(X509V3_EXT_METHOD *ext);
777called.
778
779The X509V3_EXT_METHOD structure is described below.
780
781struct {
782int ext_nid;
783int ext_flags;
784X509V3_EXT_NEW ext_new;
785X509V3_EXT_FREE ext_free;
786X509V3_EXT_D2I d2i;
787X509V3_EXT_I2D i2d;
788X509V3_EXT_I2S i2s;
789X509V3_EXT_S2I s2i;
790X509V3_EXT_I2V i2v;
791X509V3_EXT_V2I v2i;
792X509V3_EXT_R2I r2i;
793X509V3_EXT_I2R i2r;
794
795void *usr_data;
796};
797
798The elements have the following meanings.
799
800ext_nid		is the NID of the object identifier of the extension.
801
802ext_flags	is set of flags. Currently the only external flag is
803		X509V3_EXT_MULTILINE which means a multi valued extensions
804		should be printed on separate lines.
805
806usr_data	is an extension specific pointer to any relevant data. This
807		allows extensions to share identical code but have different
808		uses. An example of this is the bit string extension which uses
809		usr_data to contain a list of the bit names.
810
811All the remaining elements are function pointers.
812
813ext_new		is a pointer to a function that allocates memory for the
814		extension ASN1 structure: for example ASN1_OBJECT_new().
815
816ext_free	is a pointer to a function that free up memory of the extension
817		ASN1 structure: for example ASN1_OBJECT_free().
818
819d2i		is the standard ASN1 function that converts a DER buffer into
820		the internal ASN1 structure: for example d2i_ASN1_IA5STRING().
821
822i2d		is the standard ASN1 function that converts the internal
823		structure into the DER representation: for example
824		i2d_ASN1_IA5STRING().
825
826The remaining functions are depend on the type of extension. One i2X and
827one X2i should be set and the rest set to NULL. The types set do not need
828to match up, for example the extension could be set using the multi valued
829v2i function and printed out using the raw i2r.
830
831All functions have the X509V3_EXT_METHOD passed to them in the 'method'
832parameter and an X509V3_CTX structure. Extension code can then access the
833parent structure via the 'method' parameter to for example make use of the value
834of usr_data. If the code needs to use detail relating to the request it can
835use the 'ctx' parameter.
836
837A note should be given here about the 'flags' member of the 'ctx' parameter.
838If it has the value CTX_TEST then the configuration syntax is being checked
839and no actual certificate or CRL exists. Therefore any attempt in the config
840file to access such information should silently succeed. If the syntax is OK
841then it should simply return a (possibly bogus) extension, otherwise it
842should return NULL.
843
844char *i2s(struct v3_ext_method *method, void *ext);
845
846This function takes the internal structure in the ext parameter and returns
847a Malloc'ed string representing its value.
848
849void * s2i(struct v3_ext_method *method, struct v3_ext_ctx *ctx, char *str);
850
851This function takes the string representation in the ext parameter and returns
852an allocated internal structure: ext_free() will be used on this internal
853structure after use.
854
855i2v and v2i handle a STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE):
856
857typedef struct
858{
859        char *section;
860        char *name;
861        char *value;
862} CONF_VALUE;
863
864Only the name and value members are currently used.
865
866STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) * i2v(struct v3_ext_method *method, void *ext);
867
868This function is passed the internal structure in the ext parameter and
869returns a STACK of CONF_VALUE structures. The values of name, value,
870section and the structure itself will be freed up with Free after use.
871Several helper functions are available to add values to this STACK.
872
873void * v2i(struct v3_ext_method *method, struct v3_ext_ctx *ctx,
874						STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) *values);
875
876This function takes a STACK_OF(CONF_VALUE) structures and should set the
877values of the external structure. This typically uses the name element to
878determine which structure element to set and the value element to determine
879what to set it to. Several helper functions are available for this
880purpose (see above).
881
882int i2r(struct v3_ext_method *method, void *ext, BIO *out, int indent);
883
884This function is passed the internal extension structure in the ext parameter
885and sends out a human readable version of the extension to out. The 'indent'
886parameter should be noted to determine the necessary amount of indentation
887needed on the output.
888
889void * r2i(struct v3_ext_method *method, struct v3_ext_ctx *ctx, char *str);
890
891This is just passed the string representation of the extension. It is intended
892to be used for more elaborate extensions where the standard single and multi
893valued options are insufficient. They can use the 'ctx' parameter to parse the
894configuration database themselves. See the context functions section for details
895of how to do this.
896
897Note: although this type takes the same parameters as the "r2s" function there
898is a subtle difference. Whereas an "r2i" function can access a configuration
899database an "s2i" function MUST NOT. This is so the internal code can safely
900assume that an "s2i" function will work without a configuration database.
901
902==============================================================================
903                            PKCS#12 Library
904==============================================================================
905
906This section describes the internal PKCS#12 support. There are very few
907differences between the old external library and the new internal code at
908present. This may well change because the external library will not be updated
909much in future.
910
911This version now includes a couple of high level PKCS#12 functions which
912generally "do the right thing" and should make it much easier to handle PKCS#12
913structures.
914
915HIGH LEVEL FUNCTIONS.
916
917For most applications you only need concern yourself with the high level
918functions. They can parse and generate simple PKCS#12 files as produced by
919Netscape and MSIE or indeed any compliant PKCS#12 file containing a single
920private key and certificate pair.
921
9221. Initialisation and cleanup.
923
924No special initialisation is needed for the internal PKCS#12 library: the 
925standard SSLeay_add_all_algorithms() is sufficient. If you do not wish to
926add all algorithms (you should at least add SHA1 though) then you can manually
927initialise the PKCS#12 library with:
928
929PKCS12_PBE_add();
930
931The memory allocated by the PKCS#12 library is freed up when EVP_cleanup() is
932called or it can be directly freed with:
933
934EVP_PBE_cleanup();
935
936after this call (or EVP_cleanup() ) no more PKCS#12 library functions should
937be called.
938
9392. I/O functions.
940
941i2d_PKCS12_bio(bp, p12)
942
943This writes out a PKCS12 structure to a BIO.
944
945i2d_PKCS12_fp(fp, p12)
946
947This is the same but for a FILE pointer.
948
949d2i_PKCS12_bio(bp, p12)
950
951This reads in a PKCS12 structure from a BIO.
952
953d2i_PKCS12_fp(fp, p12)
954
955This is the same but for a FILE pointer.
956
9573. High level functions.
958
9593.1 Parsing with PKCS12_parse().
960
961int PKCS12_parse(PKCS12 *p12, char *pass, EVP_PKEY **pkey, X509 **cert,
962								 STACK **ca);
963
964This function takes a PKCS12 structure and a password (ASCII, null terminated)
965and returns the private key, the corresponding certificate and any CA
966certificates. If any of these is not required it can be passed as a NULL.
967The 'ca' parameter should be either NULL, a pointer to NULL or a valid STACK
968structure. Typically to read in a PKCS#12 file you might do:
969
970p12 = d2i_PKCS12_fp(fp, NULL);
971PKCS12_parse(p12, password, &pkey, &cert, NULL); 	/* CAs not wanted */
972PKCS12_free(p12);
973
9743.2 PKCS#12 creation with PKCS12_create().
975
976PKCS12 *PKCS12_create(char *pass, char *name, EVP_PKEY *pkey, X509 *cert,
977			STACK *ca, int nid_key, int nid_cert, int iter,
978						 int mac_iter, int keytype);
979
980This function will create a PKCS12 structure from a given password, name,
981private key, certificate and optional STACK of CA certificates. The remaining
9825 parameters can be set to 0 and sensible defaults will be used.
983
984The parameters nid_key and nid_cert are the key and certificate encryption
985algorithms, iter is the encryption iteration count, mac_iter is the MAC
986iteration count and keytype is the type of private key. If you really want
987to know what these last 5 parameters do then read the low level section.
988
989Typically to create a PKCS#12 file the following could be used:
990
991p12 = PKCS12_create(pass, "My Certificate", pkey, cert, NULL, 0,0,0,0,0);
992i2d_PKCS12_fp(fp, p12);
993PKCS12_free(p12);
994
9953.3 Changing a PKCS#12 structure password.
996
997int PKCS12_newpass(PKCS12 *p12, char *oldpass, char *newpass);
998
999This changes the password of an already existing PKCS#12 structure. oldpass
1000is the old password and newpass is the new one. An error occurs if the old
1001password is incorrect.
1002
1003LOW LEVEL FUNCTIONS.
1004
1005In some cases the high level functions do not provide the necessary
1006functionality. For example if you want to generate or parse more complex
1007PKCS#12 files. The sample pkcs12 application uses the low level functions
1008to display details about the internal structure of a PKCS#12 file.
1009
1010Introduction.
1011
1012This is a brief description of how a PKCS#12 file is represented internally:
1013some knowledge of PKCS#12 is assumed.
1014
1015A PKCS#12 object contains several levels.
1016
1017At the lowest level is a PKCS12_SAFEBAG. This can contain a certificate, a
1018CRL, a private key, encrypted or unencrypted, a set of safebags (so the
1019structure can be nested) or other secrets (not documented at present). 
1020A safebag can optionally have attributes, currently these are: a unicode
1021friendlyName (a Unicode string) or a localKeyID (a string of bytes).
1022
1023At the next level is an authSafe which is a set of safebags collected into
1024a PKCS#7 ContentInfo. This can be just plain data, or encrypted itself.
1025
1026At the top level is the PKCS12 structure itself which contains a set of
1027authSafes in an embedded PKCS#7 Contentinfo of type data. In addition it
1028contains a MAC which is a kind of password protected digest to preserve
1029integrity (so any unencrypted stuff below can't be tampered with).
1030
1031The reason for these levels is so various objects can be encrypted in various
1032ways. For example you might want to encrypt a set of private keys with
1033triple-DES and then include the related certificates either unencrypted or
1034with lower encryption. Yes it's the dreaded crypto laws at work again which
1035allow strong encryption on private keys and only weak encryption on other
1036stuff.
1037
1038To build one of these things you turn all certificates and keys into safebags
1039(with optional attributes). You collect the safebags into (one or more) STACKS
1040and convert these into authsafes (encrypted or unencrypted).  The authsafes
1041are collected into a STACK and added to a PKCS12 structure.  Finally a MAC
1042inserted.
1043
1044Pulling one apart is basically the reverse process. The MAC is verified against
1045the given password. The authsafes are extracted and each authsafe split into
1046a set of safebags (possibly involving decryption). Finally the safebags are
1047decomposed into the original keys and certificates and the attributes used to
1048match up private key and certificate pairs.
1049
1050Anyway here are the functions that do the dirty work.
1051
10521. Construction functions.
1053
10541.1 Safebag functions.
1055
1056M_PKCS12_x5092certbag(x509)
1057
1058This macro takes an X509 structure and returns a certificate bag. The
1059X509 structure can be freed up after calling this function.
1060
1061M_PKCS12_x509crl2certbag(crl)
1062
1063As above but for a CRL.
1064
1065PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO *PKEY2PKCS8(EVP_PKEY *pkey)
1066
1067Take a private key and convert it into a PKCS#8 PrivateKeyInfo structure.
1068Works for both RSA and DSA private keys. NB since the PKCS#8 PrivateKeyInfo
1069structure contains a private key data in plain text form it should be free'd
1070up as soon as it has been encrypted for security reasons (freeing up the
1071structure zeros out the sensitive data). This can be done with
1072PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO_free().
1073
1074PKCS8_add_keyusage(PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO *p8, int usage)
1075
1076This sets the key type when a key is imported into MSIE or Outlook 98. Two
1077values are currently supported: KEY_EX and KEY_SIG. KEY_EX is an exchange type
1078key that can also be used for signing but its size is limited in the export
1079versions of MS software to 512 bits, it is also the default. KEY_SIG is a
1080signing only key but the keysize is unlimited (well 16K is supposed to work).
1081If you are using the domestic version of MSIE then you can ignore this because
1082KEY_EX is not limited and can be used for both.
1083
1084PKCS12_SAFEBAG *PKCS12_MAKE_KEYBAG(PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO *p8)
1085
1086Convert a PKCS8 private key structure into a keybag. This routine embeds the
1087p8 structure in the keybag so p8 should not be freed up or used after it is
1088called.  The p8 structure will be freed up when the safebag is freed.
1089
1090PKCS12_SAFEBAG *PKCS12_MAKE_SHKEYBAG(int pbe_nid, unsigned char *pass, int passlen, unsigned char *salt, int saltlen, int iter, PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO *p8)
1091
1092Convert a PKCS#8 structure into a shrouded key bag (encrypted). p8 is not
1093embedded and can be freed up after use.
1094
1095int PKCS12_add_localkeyid(PKCS12_SAFEBAG *bag, unsigned char *name, int namelen)
1096int PKCS12_add_friendlyname(PKCS12_SAFEBAG *bag, unsigned char *name, int namelen)
1097
1098Add a local key id or a friendlyname to a safebag.
1099
11001.2 Authsafe functions.
1101
1102PKCS7 *PKCS12_pack_p7data(STACK *sk)
1103Take a stack of safebags and convert them into an unencrypted authsafe. The
1104stack of safebags can be freed up after calling this function.
1105
1106PKCS7 *PKCS12_pack_p7encdata(int pbe_nid, unsigned char *pass, int passlen, unsigned char *salt, int saltlen, int iter, STACK *bags);
1107
1108As above but encrypted.
1109
11101.3 PKCS12 functions.
1111
1112PKCS12 *PKCS12_init(int mode)
1113
1114Initialise a PKCS12 structure (currently mode should be NID_pkcs7_data).
1115
1116M_PKCS12_pack_authsafes(p12, safes)
1117
1118This macro takes a STACK of authsafes and adds them to a PKCS#12 structure.
1119
1120int PKCS12_set_mac(PKCS12 *p12, unsigned char *pass, int passlen, unsigned char *salt, int saltlen, int iter, EVP_MD *md_type);
1121
1122Add a MAC to a PKCS12 structure. If EVP_MD is NULL use SHA-1, the spec suggests
1123that SHA-1 should be used.
1124
11252. Extraction Functions.
1126
11272.1 Safebags.
1128
1129M_PKCS12_bag_type(bag)
1130
1131Return the type of "bag". Returns one of the following
1132
1133NID_keyBag
1134NID_pkcs8ShroudedKeyBag			7
1135NID_certBag				8
1136NID_crlBag				9
1137NID_secretBag				10
1138NID_safeContentsBag			11
1139
1140M_PKCS12_cert_bag_type(bag)
1141
1142Returns type of certificate bag, following are understood.
1143
1144NID_x509Certificate			14
1145NID_sdsiCertificate			15
1146
1147M_PKCS12_crl_bag_type(bag)
1148
1149Returns crl bag type, currently only NID_crlBag is recognised.
1150
1151M_PKCS12_certbag2x509(bag)
1152
1153This macro extracts an X509 certificate from a certificate bag.
1154
1155M_PKCS12_certbag2x509crl(bag)
1156
1157As above but for a CRL.
1158
1159EVP_PKEY * PKCS82PKEY(PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO *p8)
1160
1161Extract a private key from a PKCS8 private key info structure.
1162
1163M_PKCS12_decrypt_skey(bag, pass, passlen) 
1164
1165Decrypt a shrouded key bag and return a PKCS8 private key info structure.
1166Works with both RSA and DSA keys
1167
1168char *PKCS12_get_friendlyname(bag)
1169
1170Returns the friendlyName of a bag if present or NULL if none. The returned
1171string is a null terminated ASCII string allocated with Malloc(). It should 
1172thus be freed up with Free() after use.
1173
11742.2 AuthSafe functions.
1175
1176M_PKCS12_unpack_p7data(p7)
1177
1178Extract a STACK of safe bags from a PKCS#7 data ContentInfo.
1179
1180#define M_PKCS12_unpack_p7encdata(p7, pass, passlen)
1181
1182As above but for an encrypted content info.
1183
11842.3 PKCS12 functions.
1185
1186M_PKCS12_unpack_authsafes(p12)
1187
1188Extract a STACK of authsafes from a PKCS12 structure.
1189
1190M_PKCS12_mac_present(p12)
1191
1192Check to see if a MAC is present.
1193
1194int PKCS12_verify_mac(PKCS12 *p12, unsigned char *pass, int passlen)
1195
1196Verify a MAC on a PKCS12 structure. Returns an error if MAC not present.
1197
1198
1199Notes.
1200
12011. All the function return 0 or NULL on error.
12022. Encryption based functions take a common set of parameters. These are
1203described below.
1204
1205pass, passlen
1206ASCII password and length. The password on the MAC is called the "integrity
1207password" the encryption password is called the "privacy password" in the
1208PKCS#12 documentation. The passwords do not have to be the same. If -1 is
1209passed for the length it is worked out by the function itself (currently
1210this is sometimes done whatever is passed as the length but that may change).
1211
1212salt, saltlen
1213A 'salt' if salt is NULL a random salt is used. If saltlen is also zero a
1214default length is used.
1215
1216iter
1217Iteration count. This is a measure of how many times an internal function is
1218called to encrypt the data. The larger this value is the longer it takes, it
1219makes dictionary attacks on passwords harder. NOTE: Some implementations do
1220not support an iteration count on the MAC. If the password for the MAC and
1221encryption is the same then there is no point in having a high iteration
1222count for encryption if the MAC has no count. The MAC could be attacked
1223and the password used for the main decryption.
1224
1225pbe_nid
1226This is the NID of the password based encryption method used. The following are
1227supported.
1228NID_pbe_WithSHA1And128BitRC4
1229NID_pbe_WithSHA1And40BitRC4
1230NID_pbe_WithSHA1And3_Key_TripleDES_CBC
1231NID_pbe_WithSHA1And2_Key_TripleDES_CBC
1232NID_pbe_WithSHA1And128BitRC2_CBC
1233NID_pbe_WithSHA1And40BitRC2_CBC
1234
1235Which you use depends on the implementation you are exporting to. "Export
1236grade" (i.e. cryptographically challenged) products cannot support all
1237algorithms. Typically you may be able to use any encryption on shrouded key
1238bags but they must then be placed in an unencrypted authsafe. Other authsafes
1239may only support 40bit encryption. Of course if you are using SSLeay
1240throughout you can strongly encrypt everything and have high iteration counts
1241on everything.
1242
12433. For decryption routines only the password and length are needed.
1244
12454. Unlike the external version the nid's of objects are the values of the
1246constants: that is NID_certBag is the real nid, therefore there is no 
1247PKCS12_obj_offset() function.  Note the object constants are not the same as
1248those of the external version. If you use these constants then you will need
1249to recompile your code.
1250
12515. With the exception of PKCS12_MAKE_KEYBAG(), after calling any function or 
1252macro of the form PKCS12_MAKE_SOMETHING(other) the "other" structure can be
1253reused or freed up safely.
1254
1255